Book Review

Book Review

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How to Cite: Mohan, B. (2024) “Book Review”, Social Development Issues. 46(3). doi: https://doi.org/10.3998/sdi.6777

Jonathan Eig, King: A Life. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2023. 669 pp., ISBN-13 978-0-37427-929-5 (Cloth), pp. 669; $39.00/$47.00Can.

“Our very survival,” Martin Luther King, Jr. (MLK), wrote, “depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change.” (557)1 Jonathan Eig’s authentic biography is reflective of his genius as well as MLK’s life and death which mirror the continued crisis, color, and character of the United States of America. The opening sentence of this classic study says it all: “On December 5, 1955, a young Black man became one of America’s founding fathers.” (3)

Eig’s well-documented biography is an event of fortitude and courage as well as vision and authenticity. Few contemporary biographies can match his insightful narratives, analyses, and depths of understanding of a complex man who “became our only modern-day founding father—as well as the nation’s most mourned martyr.” The author of this biography “gives us a King for our times: a deep thinker, a brilliant strategist, and a committed radical who led one of history’s greatest movements, and whose demands for racial and economic justice remain as urgent today as they were in his lifetime” (left blurb).

One of the saddest ironies of great men and women is that they morph into mascots at the hands of their followers. Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi comes to mind. In Modi’s India, ironically, Gandhi is used as a tool to propagate values and practices which run contrary to the Gandhian ideals. Gandhi, the “father of the nation,” has become a garlanded poster that subconsciously redeems the anti-Gandhian establishment. In the US, Trumpian values and practices have reduced MLK’s role to irrelevance. Likewise, South Africa is in chaos in post-Mandela developments.

This 669-page book, divided into three parts containing forty-five chapters, seeks to immortalize MLK and his legacy. As a Black man, intellectual, activist, and a national leader he stands out as an American hero notwithstanding his frailties. We live in dangerous times. From Ukraine to Gaza, the banality of violence and terror define the nature of conflicts which cannot be resolved by indiscriminate bombardment and mayhem. Both MLK and MKG—the lost apostles of peace—are nearly footnotes to history. A wise man said: History is written by those who hang the heroes. This book would rewrite the future of current history.

King, to paraphrase Kierkgaard’s ideas, lived a life in “despair.” In the existential labyrinths of temporal and eternal, finite and infinite, and freedom and necessity, MLK embodied The Sickness Unto Death. I know no one after MLK who defines the qualitative essence of despair. We live in a dangerous world where the ubiquity of terror debases the human condition. Kierkgaard’s ambiguity about Christianity evolves as faith in MLK’s lifelong struggle against the sins of man. MLK roared in the Black church invoking God to end slavery and injustice. His nonviolent revolution stands out as a requiem. He had a dream that remains unfulfilled: “Black America Still Wears Chains” (42–52).

MLK’s assassin, dialectically, immortalized “The Most Dangerous Negro” (340–350). MLK was 39 years old:

“His death lit the nation on fire—that night and for years to come. Memphis burned. Detroit burned. Washington, D.C., burned. More than a hundred cities went up in flames. Dozens of Black men died. More than ten thousand were arrested.”

“ ‘Every racist in the country has killed Dr. King,’ the activist James Farmer told a reporter. ‘Evil societies always destroy their consciences.’” (552)

Jonathan Eig is one of the most reputed biographers of our time. His dedication, fortitude, and determination enlighten every page and person, event, situation, and context that define MLK as a liberator of humanity. This immeasurably documented and master-fully narrated biography is a monumental work that would keep the flames of freedom alive forever.

This inquisitive reviewer is stoically touched by the illustrious vignettes of this magnificent life story:

Notes

  1. Page numbers within parenthesis refer to the quotes as given in the book under review.
  2. A letter to the editor of The Atlanta Constitution in 1946 in response to the shotgun murder of two Black couples in Walton County, Georgia (p. 61).